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I'm organising a casino event for my department (around 150 employees), we could hire a casino company to come in and organize everything, but this would cost over £700. Alternatively we could use existing casino tables that we have access too, and some volunteer employees could be the croupiers. Would a couple of hours practice be sufficient for a croupier to learn the ropes and be reasonably profficient?

2007-11-21 20:09:06 · 3 answers · asked by pantocool 1 in Games & Recreation Gambling

3 answers

Depends if you want a proper casino night, or a fun night.

I'd recommend asking experienced card players on your staff to be croupiers for you to keep the budget down.

2007-11-21 20:19:11 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

It takes 6 to 8 weeks to knock out a lumpy that you wouldn't want dealing to more than two punters. A couple of hours practise will do you no good. It takes any where up to a week to train an experienced croupier on another game. If you are going to have around 150 people at the bash I would seriously look at a professional fun casino company. If you have access to tables it should knock the price down a bit.

2007-11-22 18:35:40 · answer #2 · answered by Player 5 · 0 0

Assuming you are not planning on playing for real money, a couple of hours should be more than enough for most casino games. Just make sure whoever is teaching them actually knows what he is talking about.

For a few games, such as craps, you want to get volunteers who already understand how the game works.

2007-11-22 08:46:02 · answer #3 · answered by zman492 7 · 0 0

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